“…Furthermore, given that neighborhood racial composition has historically been an important dimension of uneven development, there is also reason to believe that patterns of investment-and therefore investment in foreclosed properties-continue to differ in neighborhoods with varied racial compositions. Predominantly black neighborhoods in particular have historically been sites of cycles of planned abandonment alternating with real estate and financial speculation and exploitation (Metzger, 2000;Wyly et al, 2012), most recently targeted aggressively by subprime firms (Ashton, 2008(Ashton, , 2012Beeman, Glasberg, & Casey, 2010;Newman, 2009;Wyly, Atia, Foxcroft, Hammel, & Phillips-Watts, 2006;Wyly, Moos, Hammel, & Kabahizi, 2009). And while many predominantly Latino communities have experienced similar trends, particularly in places where they make up more of the population, the banking and real estate industries have also treated Latinos and Latino communities as distinctive "niche markets" on which they can increasingly capitalize (Pfeiffer & Molina, 2013).…”